US9565661B2 - Methods and apparatuses for signaling radio bearer transmission in a heterogenous network - Google Patents
Methods and apparatuses for signaling radio bearer transmission in a heterogenous network Download PDFInfo
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- US9565661B2 US9565661B2 US14/421,888 US201214421888A US9565661B2 US 9565661 B2 US9565661 B2 US 9565661B2 US 201214421888 A US201214421888 A US 201214421888A US 9565661 B2 US9565661 B2 US 9565661B2
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- H04W72/21—Control channels or signalling for resource management in the uplink direction of a wireless link, i.e. towards the network
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- H04W76/15—Setup of multiple wireless link connections
- H04W76/16—Involving different core network technologies, e.g. a packet-switched [PS] bearer in combination with a circuit-switched [CS] bearer
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Definitions
- Embodiments of the present invention generally relate to wireless communication techniques including the 3GPP (the 3rd Generation Partnership Project) LTE (Long Term Evolution) technique. More particularly, embodiments of the present invention relate to methods, apparatuses, and computer program products for signaling radio bearer transmission in a heterogeneous network.
- 3GPP the 3rd Generation Partnership Project
- LTE Long Term Evolution
- a LAN system is generally capable of providing relatively high speed data services. How to provide local access with a high speed data rate using a wireless communication system, e.g., an LTE system or an EPS, has become a hot topic in the 3GPP. This kind of local access may either compete with or complement other wireless local access techniques.
- One embodiment of the present invention provides a method.
- the method comprises performing, by a UE, at least one of the following: a local area RRC connection procedure with a local area BS over a local area specific SRB; and a wide area RRC connection procedure with a wide area BS over a wide area specific SRB via the local area BS.
- the method further comprises encapsulating, prior to the local area RRC connection procedure, a local area RRC message into the local area specific SRB and encapsulating, prior to the wide area RRC connection procedure, a wide area RRC message into the wide area specific SRB.
- the local area RRC message is signaled over a local UL CCCH.
- the method further comprises including into the local area specific SRB a message type field indicative of the local area RRC message being a local UL CCCH type message.
- the local area RRC connection procedure comprises a local area RRC connection establishment or reestablishment procedure
- the wide area RRC connection procedure comprises a wide area RRC connection establishment or reestablishment procedure
- the local area BS is an LTE LAN AP and the wide area BS is a macro eNB
- the local area specific SRB is a local area SRB 0
- the wide area specific SRB is a wide area SRB 0 .
- the method comprises performing, by a local area BS, as least one of the following: a local area RRC connection procedure with a UE over a local area specific SRB and forwarding between the UE and a wide area BS a wide area RRC message over a wide area specific SRB for establishing a wide area RRC connection between the wide area BS and the UE.
- the method further comprises encapsulating, prior to the local area RRC connection procedure, a local area RRC message into the local area specific SRB.
- the local area RRC message is signaled over a local DL CCCH.
- the method further comprises including into the local area specific SRB a message type field indicative of the local area RRC message being a local DL CCCH type message.
- the local area RRC connection procedure comprises a local area RRC connection establishment or reestablishment procedure
- the wide area RRC connection procedure comprises a wide area RRC connection establishment or reestablishment procedure
- the local area BS is an LTE LAN AP and the wide area BS is a macro eNB
- the local area specific SRB is a local area SRB 0
- the wide area specific SRB is a wide area SRB 0 .
- the apparatus comprises at least one of the following: means for performing, by a UE, a local area RRC connection procedure with a local area BS over a local area specific SRB and means for performing, by a UE, a wide area RRC connection procedure with a wide area BS over a wide area specific SRB via the local area BS.
- the apparatus comprises at least one of the following: means for performing, by a local area BS, a local area RRC connection procedure with a UE over a local area specific SRB and means for performing, by a local area BS, forwarding between the UE and a wide area BS a wide area RRC message over a wide area specific SRB for establishing a wide area RRC connection between the wide area BS and the UE.
- a further embodiment of the present invention provides an apparatus.
- the apparatus comprises at least one processor and at least one memory including computer program instructions.
- the at least one memory and computer program instructions are configured to, with the at least one processor, cause the apparatus at least to perform at least one of the following: a local area RRC connection procedure with a local area BS over a local area specific SRB and a wide area RRC connection procedure with a wide area BS over a wide area specific SRB via the local area BS.
- An additional embodiment of the present invention provides an apparatus.
- the apparatus comprises at least one processor and at least one memory including computer program instructions.
- the at least one memory and computer program instructions are configured to, with the at least one processor, cause the apparatus at least to perform at least one of the following: a local area RRC connection procedure with a UE over a local area specific SRB and forwarding between the UE and a wide area BS a wide area RRC message over a wide area specific SRB for establishing a wide area RRC connection between the wide area BS and the UE.
- One embodiment of the present invention provides a computer program product, comprising at least one computer readable storage medium having a computer readable program code portion stored thereon.
- the computer readable program code portion comprises at least one of the following: program code instructions for performing, by a UE, a local area RRC connection procedure with a local area BS over a local area specific SRB and program code instructions for performing, by a UE, a wide area RRC connection procedure with a wide area BS over a wide area specific SRB via the local area BS.
- One embodiment of the present invention provides a computer program product, comprising at least one computer readable storage medium having a computer readable program code portion stored thereon.
- the computer readable program code portion comprises at least one of the following: program code instructions for performing, by a local area BS, a local area RRC connection procedure with a UE over a local area specific SRB and program code instructions for performing, by a local area BS, forwarding between the UE and a wide area BS a wide area RRC message over a wide area specific SRB for establishing a wide area RRC connection between the wide area BS and the UE.
- FIG. 1 illustrates an exemplary heterogeneous network including an LTE-LAN network and a legacy LTE or EPS network in which the embodiments of the present invention may be practiced;
- FIG. 2 schematically illustrates a flat C-plane protocol stack for the heterogeneous network as illustrated in FIG. 1 ;
- FIG. 3 is a flow chart schematically illustrating a method for transmission of a specific SRB (e.g., SRB 0 ) from a UE's perspective according to an embodiment of the present invention
- FIG. 4 is a flow chart schematically illustrating a method for transmission of a specific SRB (e.g., SRB 0 ) from a local area BS (e.g., an LTE-LAN AP) according to an embodiment of the present invention
- a specific SRB e.g., SRB 0
- a local area BS e.g., an LTE-LAN AP
- FIG. 5 schematically illustrates transmission of a local area SRB 0 and a wide area SRB 0 following the flat C-plane protocol stack as illustrated in FIG. 2 according to an embodiment of the present invention
- FIG. 6 schematically illustrates a new field of a local RRC message encapsulated in a local SRB 0 according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 7 is a simplified schematic block diagram illustrating apparatuses according to embodiments of the present invention.
- a BS in the present invention may refer to one of a NB, an eNB, a base transceiver station, a radio BS, and the like and thus they may be used interchangeably throughout the specification and claims as appropriate.
- An LTE-LAN (may also referred to as eLAN or eLA) technique is a heterogeneous network technique that can be used in a network consisting of an EPS network comprising macro/micro/pico BSs and a LAN comprising wireless APs.
- a UE may have EPS and eLAN connectivity separately or concurrently.
- the eLAN may provide high performance services for wireless communication users with relatively low costs.
- the UE may have EPS bearer, offloaded EPS bearer and eLAN bearer services.
- FIG. 1 illustrates an exemplary heterogeneous network 100 including an LTE-LAN, in which exemplary network entities and interfaces between these entities are illustrated and embodiments of the present application can be practiced.
- the LTE-LAN applies a new LTE-like radio interface as a “simplified LTE-Uu” interface between the UE and LTE-LAN AP.
- the LTE-LAN network supports a “stand-alone” mode where the LTE-LAN network is working autonomously by providing a basic wireless broadband access with UE traffic routing to a local LAN/IP network directly from an LTE-LAN AP (a specific kind of a local area BS in the present invention) and to the Internet via a default GW of this LAN/IP network.
- This autonomous “stand-alone” mode operation is useful especially in the case where overlaying macro network service (also termed a wide area service relative to a local area service in the present invention) coverage, e.g., provided by an “associated” macro eNB (also termed a wide area BS in the present invention) as illustrated in FIG.
- the local LAN transport network may include an ordinary Ethernet-based LAN, i.e. IEEE 802.3 or any of its modern extensions like Gigabit-Ethernet, as shown in FIG. 1 .
- this stand-alone LTE-LAN operation resembles existing Wi-Fi network solutions except that the radio interface is using said simplified LTE-Uu interface with LTE procedures.
- the LTE local radio would use an LTE physical layer or any of its extensions (e.g., LTE-Advanced) and LTE protocols with possible simplifications compared to a WAN.
- the LTE-LAN may additionally include new features specifically designed for the local wireless access.
- the LTE-LAN network provides means for UE authentication and authorization to use services provided by the LTE-LAN network. This may be implemented by using similar methods as applied in WLAN (IEEE 802.11i) but modified to carry the authentication protocol messages, e.g. EAP encapsulated into LTE Uu RRC messages.
- WLAN IEEE 802.11i
- FIG. 1 there is shown an optional local authentication server that may be a RADIUS server or a diameter server like the one used in enterprise Wi-Fi networks.
- LTE-LAN local access services deployment and operation either by a different mobile operator than the macro eNB, or a local access network operator (third party), where the usage of LTE-LAN network locally supported services may be kept transparent to the CN for simplicity and for lightening signaling load exposed to the CN.
- a problem may arise during signaling transmissions when the UE is in a single radio mode in which the UE may only communicate with the “associated” macro eNB via the LTE-LAN AP rather than communicating directly with the macro eNB and indirectly therewith via the LTE-LAN AP simultaneously, i.e., in a dual radio mode.
- the problem may arise during signaling transmissions when the UE is in a single radio mode in which the UE may only communicate with the “associated” macro eNB via the LTE-LAN AP rather than communicating directly with the macro eNB and indirectly therewith via the LTE-LAN AP simultaneously, i.e., in a dual radio mode.
- the eNB and UE will use different SRBs for different RRC messages based upon the information included therein. For example, when an RRCConnectionRequest message is sent on the CCCH and there is no security concern for this message, the RRCConnectionRequest message would use SRB 0 for transmission. Again, when an RRCConnectionReconfiguration message is sent from the eNB to the UE on the DCCH, it is ciphered and integrity protected at a PDCP layer (e.g., one illustrated in FIG. 2 ) and should use SRB 1 for transmission. Additionally, when an ULInformationTransfer message containing NAS PDU(s) is sent on the DCCH and ciphered based upon related NAS layer security keys, it should use SRB 2 for transmission.
- a PDCP layer e.g., one illustrated in FIG. 2
- certain embodiments of the present invention would provide for an efficient way of transmitting RRC messages using SRB 0 such that the RRC connections, which are established or reestablished using SRB 0 between the UE and the LTE-LAN AP and between the UE and the macro eNB via the LTE-LAN AP, could be performed properly and efficiently.
- certain embodiments of the present invention attend to SRB 0 transmission based upon a flat RRC protocol stack for LTE-LAN networks, as exemplarily illustrated in FIG. 2 and will be discussed in detail later.
- two SRB 0 have been defined with one for a local RRC connection and the other for an EPS RRC connection. More particularly, the local RRC connection (re)establishment between the UE and AP could be done directly via a local SRB 0 , and the EPS RRC connection (re)establishment between the UE and the associated macro eNB could be done via an EPS SRB 0 .
- a local domain SRB 0 (i.e., a local SRB 0 ) would be used to encapsulate the local RRC connection message and transmitted between a local RRC entity in the UE and a local RRC entity in the AP.
- two new message types be introduced to further distinguish the local SRB 0 .
- a local DL SRB 0 transmission a local DL CCCH message type can be defined.
- a local UL SRB 0 transmission a local UL CCCH message type can be defined.
- the UE and AP could identify if the received SRB 0 is for a local RRC signaling or an EPS RRC signaling.
- the AP may forward the EPS domain SRB 0 (i.e., EPS SRB 0 ) from the UE to the EPS RRC entity in the associated eNB.
- EPS SRB 0 EPS domain SRB 0
- FIGS. 2-7 the embodiments of the present invention would be discussed in more detail in connection with FIGS. 2-7 .
- FIG. 2 schematically illustrates a flat C-plane protocol stack for the heterogeneous network as illustrated in FIG. 1 .
- the UE and the LAN-AP may have, from the upper layers to the lower layers, their respect RRC, PDCP, RLC, MAC, and PHY protocol layers.
- the signaling messages between the UE and the macro LTE network are passed transparently via the LTE-LAN system in a similar manner as e.g., NAS messages are passed from the UE to the MME encapsulated in ciphered NAS containers.
- the RRC protocol layer may be in charge of the connection control, measurement configuration, and system information broadcasting; the PDCP protocol layer may be responsible for security handling, i.e., integrity protection/check and ciphering/de-ciphering, and also header compression for SRBs; and RLC protocol layer may form an appropriate RLC PDU suitable for transmission by the segmentation and concatenation functions of an RLC SDU received from the PDCP protocol layer and include a plurality of RLC entities which may be in one of the TM, UM and AM as configured.
- Handling within the MAC and PHY protocol layers below the RLC protocol layer is substantially the same for transmission of an EPS RRC message between the UE and associated eNB and for transmission of a local RRC message between the UE and LTE-LAN AP.
- SRB 0 which is specified not to be subject to the handling of the PDCP protocol layer
- the RRC message generated in the RRC protocol layer will be encapsulated in an SRB and then secured in the PDCP protocol layer according to the security requirement of this message).
- the EPS RRC messages i.e., wide area signaling messages
- the LAN RRC messages will be secured based upon local security mechanisms employed in a separate PDCP entity, subjected to the processing of an AM RLC entity and then delivered to the MAC and PHY protocol layers.
- this flat RRC stack for the LTE-LAN network may establish separate RRC entities within one RRC layer of UE, that is, an RRC entity for EPS services and an RRC entity for eLA(N) services, which can be referred to as an EPS RRC entity and a Local RRC entity, respectively, wherein the Local RRC entity located in the UE is capable of transmitting/receiving local RRC signaling to/from the counterpart RRC entity located in the AP, secured by a local security mechanism when the local RRC signaling is not encapsulated over the local SRB 0 , and the EPS RRC entity located in the UE is capable of transmitting/receiving EPS RRC signaling to/from the counterpart RRC entity located in associated eNB, secured by EPS security mechanism when the EPS RRC signaling is not encapsulated over the EPS SRB 0 .
- FIG. 3 is a flow chart schematically illustrating a method 300 for transmission of a specific SRB from a UE's perspective according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the method 300 begins at step S 301 and proceeds to step S 302 , at which the method 300 performs, by a UE, as least one of the following: a local area RRC connection procedure with a local area BS over a local area specific SRB; and a wide area RRC connection procedure with a wide area BS over a wide area specific SRB via the local area BS.
- the term “specific SRB” in this specification may refer to the SRB 0 in the LTE or UMTS system and may further refer to any other SRBs that may be developed in any future wireless systems and that may implement the same or similar functionality of the SRB 0 .
- the SRB 0 is merely an example of the specific SRB and should not be used to limit the scope of the embodiments of the present invention in any respect. In the following, for a purpose of easy discussions, the specific SRB and SRB 0 may be used interchangeably where necessary.
- the performance of at least one of the local area RRC connection procedure and the wide area RRC connection procedure may be dependent upon the UE's demands in relation to the local service or EPS service. For example, if the UE would like to “consume” local services, it may initiate a local RRC connection with the serving AP over a local SRB 0 . Likewise, if the UE requests wide area services (e.g., EPS services), it may initiate an EPS RRC connection with an associated eNB over a wide area SRB 0 (e.g., EPS SRB 0 ).
- wide area services e.g., EPS services
- the above performance of the local area RRC connection or the wide area RRC connection procedure may equally be established by the local area BS (e.g., an LTE-LAN AP) or the wide area BS (e.g., an associated eNB).
- the method 300 ends at step S 303 .
- the method 300 further comprises encapsulating, prior to the local area RRC connection procedure, a local area RRC message into the local area specific SRB and encapsulating, prior to the wide area RRC connection procedure, a wide area RRC message into the wide area specific SRB.
- the local area RRC message is signaled over a local UL CCCH channel.
- the method 300 further comprises including into the local area specific SRB a message type field indicative of the local area RRC message being a local UL CCCH type message, as will be discussed in connection with FIG. 6 .
- the local area RRC connection procedure comprises a local area RRC connection establishment or reestablishment procedure
- the wide area RRC connection procedure comprises a wide area RRC connection establishment or reestablishment procedure
- the local area BS is an LTE LAN AP
- the wide area BS is a macro eNB
- the local area specific SRB is a local area SRB 0
- the wide area specific SRB is a wide area SRB 0 (e.g., EPS SRB 0 ).
- the UE Based upon the method 300 as performed by the UE, transmission of the specific SRB (e.g., SRB 0 ) under the flat RRC stack as illustrated in FIG. 2 would be efficiently implemented. Thereby, the UE or local area BS may operate in a highly-efficient manner in the LTE-LAN network.
- SRB specific SRB
- FIG. 4 is a flow chart schematically illustrating a method 400 for transmission of a specific SRB (e.g., SRB 0 ) from a local area BS (e.g., an LTE-LAN AP) according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the method 400 begins at step S 401 and advances to step S 402 , at which the method 400 performs, by a local area BS, as least one of the following: a local area RRC connection procedure with a UE over a local area specific SRB and forwarding between the UE and a wide area BS a wide area RRC message over a wide area specific SRB for establishing a wide area RRC connection between the wide area BS and the UE.
- a local area RRC connection procedure with a UE over a local area specific SRB and forwarding between the UE and a wide area BS a wide area RRC message over a wide area specific SRB for establishing a wide area RRC connection between the wide area BS and the UE.
- the method 400 further comprises encapsulating, prior to the local area RRC connection procedure, a local area RRC message into the local area specific SRB.
- the local area RRC message is signaled over a local DL CCCH channel.
- the method 400 further comprises including into the local area specific SRB a message type field indicative of the local area RRC message being a local DL CCCH type message, as will be discussed in connection with FIG. 6 .
- the local area RRC connection procedure comprises a local area RRC connection establishment or reestablishment procedure
- the wide area RRC connection procedure comprises a wide area RRC connection establishment or reestablishment procedure
- the local area BS is an LTE LAN AP and the wide area BS is a macro eNB
- the local area specific SRB is a local area SRB 0
- the wide area specific SRB is a wide area SRB 0 (e.g., an EPS SRB 0 ).
- SRB 0 transmission under the flat RRC protocol stack as illustrated in FIG. 2 would be efficiently implemented. Furthermore, the local area SRB 0 and wide area SRB 0 transmission would be distinguished at the local area BS and properly handled.
- FIG. 5 schematically illustrates transmission of a local area SRB 0 and a wide area SRB 0 (e.g., EPS SRB 0 ) on the flat C-plane protocol stack as illustrated in FIG. 2 according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- SRB 0 e.g., EPS SRB 0
- two SRB 0 are defined based on the flat RRC protocol stack according to the embodiments of the present invention, i.e., a local SRB 0 and an EPS SRB 0 , whose transmission links are exemplarily depicted by lines in FIG. 5 . As seen from FIG.
- the local SRB 0 transmission link can be established between an RRC entity for eLA at the UE and a counterpart RRC entity for eLA at the AR
- the EPS SRB 0 transmission link can be established between an RRC entity for EPS at the UE and a counterpart RRC entity for EPS at the associated eNB.
- the EPS SRB 0 transmission cannot be established directly between the UE and the associated eNB but rather rely upon the relay of the AP.
- the local SRB 0 terminates at the LTE-LAN AP side while the EPS SRB 0 terminates at the associated eNB side.
- the SRB 0 transmission due to its characteristic as mentioned before, does not involve any PDCP association and security protection and thus no PDCP layer is depicted in FIG. 5 .
- a common part of these two SRB 0 transmission paths is that they share the same lower layer (RLC/MAC/PHY) transmission over LTE-LAN Uu interface for the case of single radio mode transmission. Due to this, it needs to distinguish different UL RRC messages at the LTE-LAN AP side so as to decide to forward which RLC SDU to which RRC entity (either the local RRC entity in the AP or the EPS RRC entity in the associated eNB). The same case also takes places at the UE side, that is, for DL RRC messages received by the RLC layer, the UE should identify which RRC entity this RRC message belongs to.
- a Local-DL-CCCH-MessageType For a differentiation purpose, two new message types are introduced according to the embodiments of the present invention, i.e., a Local-DL-CCCH-MessageType and a Local-UL-CCCH-MessageType.
- the local RRC entity at the UE/AP side would tag this message with the corresponding local message type information (or bit), i.e. Local-UL-CCCH-MessageType/Local-DL-CCCH-MessageType in a new message type field of the RRC message as shown in FIG. 6 .
- AP/UE can distinguish which domain this SRB 0 message belongs to using the message type field and thus pass the message to the right RRC entity for interpretation. It can be understood that the embodiments of the present invention enable single LTE-LAN radio to support both the local and EPS services with the flat RRC protocol stack.
- FIG. 6 schematically illustrates a new field of a RRC message encapsulated in a SRB 0 according to another embodiment of the present invention.
- the embodiments of the present invention additionally include a new field of a local message type in an RRC message.
- this type field the AP and UE are able to determine a correct domain to which the received RRC messages belong and thus conduct corresponding operations.
- FIG. 7 is a simplified schematic block diagram illustrating apparatuses according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- a UE 701 is located in the coverage of a radio network node 702 or 703 and is configured to be in connection with the radio network node 702 or 703 .
- the UE 701 comprises a controller 704 operationally connected to a memory 705 and a transceiver 706 .
- the controller 704 controls the operation of the UE 701 .
- the memory 705 is configured to store software and data.
- the transceiver 706 is configured to set up and maintain a wireless connection 707 to the radio network node 702 or 703 .
- the transceiver 706 is operationally connected to a set of antenna ports 708 connected to an antenna arrangement 709 .
- the antenna arrangement 709 may comprise a set of antennas.
- the number of antennas may be one to four, for example.
- the number of antennas is not limited to any particular number.
- the UE 701 may also comprise various other components, such as a user interface, camera, and media player. They are not displayed in the figure due to simplicity.
- the radio network node 702 or 703 such as an LTE BS (or eNB) or LTE-LAN AP included in an eLAN, comprises a controller 710 operationally connected to a memory 711 , and a transceiver 712 .
- the controller 710 controls the operation of the radio network node 702 or 703 .
- the memory 711 is configured to store software and data.
- the transceiver 712 is configured to set up and maintain a wireless connection to the UE 701 within the service area of the radio network node 702 or 703 .
- the transceiver 712 is operationally connected to an antenna arrangement 713 .
- the antenna arrangement 713 may comprise a set of antennas. The number of antennas may be two to four, for example.
- the radio network node 702 or 703 may be operationally connected (directly or indirectly) to another CN or LAN network element 714 of the communication system, such as an RNC, an MME, an MSC server (MSS), an MSC, an RRM node, a gateway GPRS support node, an OAM node, an HLR, a VLR, a serving GPRS support node, a GW, and/or a server, via an interface 715 .
- the network node 714 comprises a controller 716 operationally connected to a memory 717 , and an interface 718 .
- the controller 716 controls the operation of the network node 714 .
- the memory 717 is configured to store software and data.
- the interface 718 is configured to connect to the radio network node 702 or 703 via a connection 719 .
- the embodiments are not, however, restricted to the network given above as an example, but a person skilled in the art may apply the solution to other communication networks provided with the necessary properties.
- the connections between different network elements may be realized with IP connections.
- the apparatus 701 , 702 , 703 , or 714 has been depicted as one entity, different modules and memory may be implemented in one or more physical or logical entities.
- the apparatus may also be a user terminal which is a piece of equipment or a device that associates, or is arranged to associate, the user terminal and its user with a subscription and allows a user to interact with a communication system.
- the user terminal presents information to the user and allows the user to input information.
- the user terminal may be any terminal capable of receiving information from and/or transmitting information to the network, connectable to the network wirelessly or via a fixed connection. Examples of the user terminals include a personal computer, a game console, a laptop (a notebook), a personal digital assistant, a mobile station (mobile phone), a smart phone, a communicator, a tablet or a pad.
- the apparatus 701 , 702 , 703 , or 714 may generally include a processor, controller, control unit or the like connected to a memory and to various interfaces of the apparatus.
- the processor is a central processing unit, but the processor may be an additional operation processor.
- the processor may comprise a computer processor, application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC), field-programmable gate array (FPGA), and/or other hardware components that have been programmed in such a way to carry out one or more functions of an embodiment.
- ASIC application-specific integrated circuit
- FPGA field-programmable gate array
- the memory 705 , 711 , or 717 may include volatile and/or non-volatile memory and typically stores content, data, or the like.
- the memory 705 , 711 , or 717 may store computer program code such as software applications (for example for transmission of the local SRB 0 between the UE and AP and the EPS SRB 0 between the UE and associated eNB via the AP) or operating systems, information, data, content, or the like for a processor to perform steps associated with operation of the apparatus 701 , 702 , 703 or 714 in accordance with embodiments.
- the memory may be, for example, a random access memory (RAM), a hard drive, or other fixed data memories or storage devices. Further, the memory, or part of it, may be removable memory detachably connected to the apparatus.
- an apparatus implementing one or more functions of a corresponding mobile entity described with an embodiment comprises not only prior art means, but also means for implementing the one or more functions of a corresponding apparatus described with an embodiment and it may comprise separate means for each separate function, or means may be configured to perform two or more functions.
- these techniques may be implemented in hardware (one or more apparatuses), firmware (one or more apparatuses), software (one or more modules), or combinations thereof.
- firmware or software implementation can be through modules (e.g., procedures, functions, and so on) that perform the functions described herein.
- the software codes may be stored in any suitable, processor/computer-readable data storage medium(s) or memory unit(s) or article(s) of manufacture and executed by one or more processors/computers.
- the data storage medium or the memory unit may be implemented within the processor/computer or external to the processor/computer, in which case it can be communicatively coupled to the processor/computer via various means as is known in the art.
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
- Signal Processing (AREA)
- Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)
Abstract
Description
-
- AM Acknowledged Mode
- AP Access Point
- BS Base Station
- CN Core Network
- CCCH Common Control Channel
- DL Downlink
- eLAN enhanced Local Area Network
- eNB evolved Node B
- EPS Enhanced Packet System
- EPC Enhanced Packet Core
- EUTRAN Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access Network
- GPRS General Packet Radio Service
- GW Gateway
- HLR Home Location Register
- HSS Home Subscriber Server
- IP Internet Protocol
- LAN Local Area Network
- LCP Logical Channel Prioritization
-
Layer 1 L1 - Layer 2 L2
- MAC Media Access Control
- MME Mobility Management Entity
- MSC Mobile Switching Centre
- NAS Non Access Stratum
- NB Node B
- OAM Operations, Administrations and Maintenance
- PDCP Packet Data Convergence Protocol
- PDU Protocol Data Unit
- PDN Packet Data Network
- PHY Physical
- PLMNID Public Land Mobile Network Identification
- RLC Radio Link Control
- RNC Radio Network Controller
- RRC Radio Resource Control
- RRM Radio Resource Management
- SDU Service Data Unit
- TM Transparent Mode
- UE User Equipment
- UL Uplink
- UM Unacknowledged Mode
- VLR Visitor Location Register
- WAN Wide Area Network
-
- SRB0 is for RRC messages using the CCCH;
- SRB1 is for RRC messages (which may include a piggybacked NAS message) as well as for NAS messages prior to the establishment of SRB2, all using the DCCH; and
- SRB2 is for RRC messages which include logged measurement information as well as for NAS messages, all using the DCCH. SRB2 has a lower priority than SRB1 and is always configured by E-UTRAN after security activation.
Claims (18)
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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PCT/CN2012/082008 WO2014047806A1 (en) | 2012-09-26 | 2012-09-26 | Methods and apparatuses for signaling radio bearer transmission in a heterogenous network |
Publications (2)
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US20150223221A1 US20150223221A1 (en) | 2015-08-06 |
US9565661B2 true US9565661B2 (en) | 2017-02-07 |
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US14/421,888 Active US9565661B2 (en) | 2012-09-26 | 2012-09-26 | Methods and apparatuses for signaling radio bearer transmission in a heterogenous network |
Country Status (3)
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US (1) | US9565661B2 (en) |
EP (1) | EP2901795B1 (en) |
WO (1) | WO2014047806A1 (en) |
Families Citing this family (3)
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WO2013173978A1 (en) * | 2012-05-22 | 2013-11-28 | Nokia Corporation | Method and apparatus for signalling transmissions |
JP6557422B6 (en) * | 2016-01-07 | 2019-09-18 | エルジー エレクトロニクス インコーポレイティド | User equipment and data transmission method therefor, and network node and data transmission method therefor |
US11317462B2 (en) * | 2018-11-05 | 2022-04-26 | Apple Inc. | Apparatus, systems, and methods for transmitting large network configuration messages |
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2012
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- 2012-09-26 WO PCT/CN2012/082008 patent/WO2014047806A1/en active Application Filing
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
EP2901795B1 (en) | 2019-07-24 |
US20150223221A1 (en) | 2015-08-06 |
EP2901795A4 (en) | 2016-05-25 |
EP2901795A1 (en) | 2015-08-05 |
WO2014047806A1 (en) | 2014-04-03 |
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